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The Sun. (North Canton, Stark County, Ohio), 1957-07-31

1957-07-31-001

!^a^sa£
Uek"lhtoit,-Siifnl
VOL. 31 NO. 44
NORTH CANTON, OHIO, WEDNESDAY. JULY 31,1957
7c PER COPY
New Post Office to Be Dedicated Sunday, August 11
Bit&cttm -- Strategy -- Tactics
,V4.With the ever-increasing number of Americans who
hg-ye had military service, a new vocabulary has come into.
being.. Words that formerly had been as remote as a
foreign Ihguage, have how become part of our every day
speech.
For example, take these three words — Directive;
Strategy; Tactics.
The all-too-often-ridiculed military really has something in these three words. They cover everything, from
A to Z, from Alpha to Omega, from Beginning to End,
ffroiii Cause1 and Effect — with one gimmick. That gimmick
ia. full of understanding not only of the meaning of each
■vy^rdjvbut^bf the. necessity of ordered sequence, and of the
rigidity of the boundaries of authority carried by each
word.
. A Directive comes from the ultimate level of authority.
It defines the overall objective. It is the policy command.
It states what is to be accomplished.
. Strategy is the master plan to carry out a directive.
It is worked out by the experts, each within a specialized
field, and is co-ordinated by a master planner who limits
the activity of any specialist to that area for which his
knowledge qualifies him.
Tatties is the active, Qperat'onal nhase of carrving out
the Strategy which meets the requirements of the Directive
It is the. area of the specific mission, in which a given
stroordi&ate forte is ordered to carry out a portion of the
maSt£r plan, using a prescribed amount of material and
manpower, to be completed at a specified time, in clearly
defined locations.
if each Tactical unit fulfills its mission, on time, in
tile area assigned to it, using the allocated manpower and
rhaterial without requiring reinforcement from higher authority, .the Strategy is successful. K the Strategy-is successful, the Directive is carried out. Tactical failure can
enda^gerr Strategy and Strategy failure nullifies the
Directive.
In noh-mllitary life the same sequences apply. A gigantic Construction program may be envisioned. A Directive
defines the proper objective in words.
The experts — engineers, architects, raw material
source men, the fabricators of the needed finished materials,
the leaders of the manpower required, the transporters of
the ¥aw material to the fabricators, and from them to the
construction site — evolve the strategic plan.
The doers — the manpower on the job, each with his
labor and effort as a tiny fraction of the whole, put the
strategic plan into effect.
Together, as „ a team, . they make possible the vast
accomplishments that make these United States of ours the
greatest, most po\verful, glorious and efficiently successful
nation in the history of the world.
There is really quite a thought for all of us in the
essential, but clearly defined limits of activity involved in
the three words — Directive, Strategy, Tactics.
The Stalin System
We have been enabled to know enough about Khrushchev to recognize that, unlike Stalin;, the newly rising leader
of the, Russian bureauracy is not a paranoiac. Khrushchev
himself, in his famous secret speech on the "cult of personality" delivered before the 20th Congress of the Russian
(jdmmUnist Party, lias made it more than evident that Stalin
Was, a madman. A purge with Khrushchev as the director
might not £0 to the extreirie of excess that characterized
the Stalin purges.
Khrushchev might not attempt to kill all of his successors. Khrushchev is likely to purge on two grounds —
political, and in order to intimidate and to terrorize. Stalin
went much further.
However, the "system of purging, of jailing or executing
opponents, the secret trial, the use of an amalgam in framing opponents, all of this is the Stalin system. And it is
the Stalin system which continues to prevail. Even without
the excesses caused by a madman who controls the system,
it remains horrible and reprehensible.
If Khrushchev, then, happens to spare one of his best
friends in the purge, let us not hail him. Khrushchev is
rising as the leader of a system which is obnoxious, and
w^&h "Ifecks ev^n elementary fair play. It mangles all that
is 'best in htimahi nature.
The new North Canton Post Office building which will be
dedicated Sunday afternoon, August 11, is located at 205 North
Main street.
The brick and masonry structure was built by Harley
Myers at a cost of $32,000 and is being leased to the government at $4,850.
Rep. Bow, who was influential in getting a new Post Office
for this town, will be the dedication speaker.
Airlines Violating
Liquor Code
Senator Strom Thurmond
of South Carolina again has
asked the Senate Subcommittee on Aviation to hold hearings on his bill to ban liquor
service aboard commercial
planes.
Last year the House overwhelmingly passed a similar bill
after testomony by pilots and
stewardesses that drinking aloft
causes serious safety hazards.
But the measure bogged down
in the Senate Commerce Committee and died with the close
of the Congressional session. The
Civil Aeronautics Board has refused to take action on the issue.
Just after the House action Air
Transport Association officials
announced that a standard of
practice agreement had been
signed by six major airlines
Which provide liquor service,
American, Eastern, National,
Northwest, TWA and United.
But the code has been virtually
ignored in recent months. Example: one of the agreements
was that no carrier wo. Id promote the availability of liquor
service. Perhaps the largest offender has been Northwest Airlines whose July timetable cover
land newspaper advertisements
Exploring the Skies from North Canton
Indoor Skies for Study North Canton Planetarium Provides
Hosts Akron^Oanton Satlelite Tracking Group
Man-made Universe
Waste By The Ton
America, one of the few islands of plenty in the sea
of human want, has the reputation of being notoriously
wasteful. Unfortunately, the reputation is well deserved.
This hfis Com?, about largely because, being richly gifted
with Natural ¥#purces and ihaving developed a remarkably
,pfodircWe^yste^,'weii^veiiever had to worry much about
.conservation.
The time is coming when Americans will have to change
their attitudes. Our population is increasing at an extraordinary rate. We should begin thinking more seriously about
conserving our resources, about making better use of what
we produce. k . .
Garbage is tnrganic matter, useful in the production of
fertilizer and Tien -gpil. The tinie will come, and probably
hot 'TRany Ttec.ad.e5 hence, when, failure to make goda OSe of
this Valuable ftfganic matter iviVt be regarded as unforgive-
.able waste. It is by no means too soon for communities "to
b&gih thffiKirig: of now to divert this vast tonnage of organic
material to -useful purposes^ i
North Canton became nationally and internationally famous in the annals of
astronomy recently when the local Satellite Tracking group was the first to simulate
the motion of the proposed satellite among the stars.
If it had not been for the efforts of Mr. Richard H. Emmons in establishing
the North Canton Planetarium, the local Satellite Tracking group probably would not
have been organized.
Last December this group became one of the nation's first official stations of
"Operation Moonwatch" under the sponsorship of the Smithsonian Astrophysical o
servatory in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The local group is one ui mree in umo working
with the Observatory.
Ti-aining sessions for the organization are held in the North Canton Planetarium
in the rear of 313 Donner road, in what appears to be a garage.
However, it is one of the fanciest garages most of us will ever see.
Inside its walls a night sky
dotted with stars comes "to life"
and stories are related concerning the stars and. legends surrounding their origin and placement in the sky.
This planetarium, which has
a capacity of 38, almost half
that serving the Cleveland Metropolitan area has a 14-foot
diameter dome upon which a
home-made star projector
"paints" its night Sky scenes.
The planetarium and its equipment were designed and built
by Mr. Emmons in his spare
time, and at a personal investment of several h.ndred rather
that the thousands usually required. He is a senior flight test
engineer at the Goodyear Aircraft corporation.
The stars were plotted and
drilled onto a globe and diurnal
motion is achieved through a
motor drive. Manual adjustments permit showing the effect
of changes in latitude and precession.
Another globe aids Mr. Emmons in outlining the star constellations and auxiliary projectors portray the sun, planets
and moon in proper phase, and
eclipses. Photographic slide projections enrich the program.
In addition, observers may see
the Southern Cross and Magellanic Clouds over Australia in
10,000 A. D., Midnight sun from
the North Pole; and the triple
conjunction of Jupiter, and Saturn in Pisces in 7 B. C.
Many thousands have -come
from an approximate radius of
25 miles to see one or all of the
4 programs offered each year.
These include the Autumn Stars,
the Christmas Star, The Winter
Stars and the Spring Stars.
Ih response to the January
1957 Scouting theme, "Eyes on
The SkieS" -approximately -2,000
regular and cub Boy Scouts attended special sessions at the
planetarium.
^Continued on Page Three}
............
the Methodist Board of Temperance.
Senator Thurmond said he has
received "numerous reports the
program is not working out" in
other ways as well.
The code calls for a limit of
two drinks per customer. But
Roland K. Quinn, Jr., president
of the Airline Stewards and
Stewardessess Ass'n, has reported: "The airlines seem to have
a tacit agreement to ignore the
code and we have many reports
of stewardesses being disciplined
for failure to serve enough liquoi
to meet airline quotas."
In addition to the many serious hazardS"" "pointed "but repeatedly by pilots and stewardesses over a two year period,
there are incidental reports
which point up the issue. Recently an American Airlines passenger choked on the toothpick
in his martini olive, forcing the
pilot to dump $400 worth of gas,
make an emergency landing in
Omaha, Nebraska, and arrange
for hospital treatment.
Mr. R. H. Emmons, originator of the North Canton "
Planetarium, is shown with the machine which makes his
showings of star-studded skies possible.
The two globes seen toward the top of the device make .
the projections on a rounded dome, giving the appearance..
: of the night skjr out-of-doors^ ,
Park Theater
To Reopen
North Canton's Park Theater
will again open Its door this fall
after being closed for more than
a year.
Representative of the heirs of
the M. M. Mohler estate, Lester
Mohler, said a five-year lease
has been completed with Lorns
seller, owner of Canton's Towne
Theater.
Extensive remodeling plans for
the 18-year-old theater are being
considered.
Mr. Heller purchased the Old
Valentine Theater in January
after it had been closed almost
five years. He reopened it as the
Towne.
The Park Theater will become
the third second-run theater in
the Canton area.
Negotiations for the lease were
handled by the T. K. Harris
Agency Co.
Rev. Kendig New Pastor at
Uniontown Methodist Church
New pastor of the Uniontown
Methodist church is the Rev.
Charles Kindig.
a gxauucue i>f Kent State University and the Boston School of
Theology, ReV. Mr. Kindig
comes to Uniontown after-serving as pastor of the McGuffey
Memorial Methodist Chuich ox
Youngstown.
Rev. Mr. Kindig and his wife,
Ardith Joan, have three children;
Ardith Joan, Debbie Elaine and
Donald Marllh.
Libr&y Extends
Reading Program
The Library has announced that its summer
reading program, which
was to end this Wednesday, has been extended
through Saturday.
This me'ahs that boys
and girls have ' until Saturday to turn in their
final reports on the books
they have read.
Rep. Frank Bow To Speak,
Special Guests Invited
The new North Canton Post Office will be dedicated
to the people of North Canton, Sunday, August 11, at 2
p.m.
Dedication services will be held to the rear of the
building wicn the loacung piatlorm serving as a stage for
the speakers.
Delivering the dedication address will be Rep. .Frank
T. Bow from the 16th Congressional District.
Special guests who have been invited include Assistant
Postmaster General Ormonde Kieb, and postmasters and
supervisors of area offices, in addition to two former local
superintendents, Mr U. H. Zengler and Mr. Clark Wehl.
The tentative program lists
music by the North Canton
Band. Mr. William Morris, city
solicitor, will serve as the toast.
master.
The invocation will be given
by Rev. Reed of the Community
Cnristian Church and the bene-
diction by Rev. Fr. R. Steigei*
of St. Paul's Catholic Church.
The Pledge of Allegiance will
be given by members of the
local Boy Scouts and American
lAgion will present the colore,
followed by greetings and wel-
come by William E. Dornan,
Canton postmaster.
Mr. C. C. Brooks, district
director from Cleveland, and
Mr. Rumble, regional director
from Cincinnati, will then deliver a few remarks and the program will be turned over to Mr.
John W. Meinhart, regional real
estate manager, who will present the keys of the building to
Mayor R. B. Evans.
The Mayor, after acepting the
building for the community, will
turn it over to the Branch Supervisor Al Davis, who will accept
the Post Office in the name of
its patrons.
Open house will be held inside immediately following the
ceremony.
Local Rotarians Hear
Rev. Brinsr Speak
On His World Trip
Guest speaker at this Thursday evening meeting of the North
Caaton KOuary cluj will be Rav.
Orville Briner of Canton.
Rev. Briner and his wife have
just returned from a cruise a-
round the world and he will have
color pictures to illustrate his
talk.
Formerly very active in YMCA
work, the Reverend is now on
leave of absence from the First
Presbyterian church in Canton,
where he had served as associate
minister.
Program chairman for the
month of August is Mr. Roy
Smith.
Knights tf Cokimbus
Install New Officers
District Deputy Paul R. Sullivan of Canton will supervise
and conduct the Installation of
Officers of Bishop McFadden
Council No. 3777 Knights of Columbus in the Council Chambers
on Wednesday August 7 at 8:30
p.m. Mr. Sullivan, who is. Past
Grand Knight and Trustee elect
of the Council will be assisted
by Mr. Lea Harrison, his personal Warden.
The General Program Chairman's monthly meeting will be
held the same evening in the
Council Chambers at 7:30.
4-H Clothing Club Meets
The Plain Township 4-H Cloth-
ing club met at the home of
Mrs. R.-. W. Hinton, July 24, at
1:30.
Barb James gave a demonstration on finishing seams and Bet-
ty Jane Gill demonstrated the
slip-stitch.
Another metting was held '■ at
Mrs. Hinton's home on Wednesday, J.ly 31. .:'
Sandra Wins Trip to California
An aptitude for coloring has won a trip to Hollywood,
California, for Miss Sandra Skinner of North Canton.
Just as soon as her father, James R. Skinner of 2436 Far-
view, can take time from his job at the E. W. Bliss Co., he
and his 11-year-old daughter will fly out to "The Home of the
Stars" for a five-day sight-seeing trip.
Disneyland is first on Sandra's list of places to visit.
The happy word came to the Skinner household last Saturday, telling them that Sandra has won first place ih the
state Superior Frankie coloring contest.
Last year Sandra won a bicycle in the same contest. She
had previously won prizes in the Repository's Christmas coloring contest and the Annie Oakley contest.
Sandra, who will be in her first year at the new Junior
High school this year, composed a 3-D of the picture of a
baseball game. She cut out each figure in the picture anfl put
them on a baseball glove which she devised. The glove was
covered with simulated leather and stitched. It was this original
and novel treatment of the subject which won for Sandra the
top award.
The trip comes as somewhat of a birthday present for
Sandra who will be 12 on August 14.
While she and her father are out west, Sahara's nrtther
and younger sister, Sally, 6, will wait at home for th«ta to
bring back still fend motion pictures of their trip. Mr. Slflhner
is &h amfcteur photographer, so there will probably be ample
of these.
The Skinners, whb have lived in North Canton three years,
&re formerly -from Reedurban.

!^a^sa£
Uek"lhtoit,-Siifnl
VOL. 31 NO. 44
NORTH CANTON, OHIO, WEDNESDAY. JULY 31,1957
7c PER COPY
New Post Office to Be Dedicated Sunday, August 11
Bit&cttm -- Strategy -- Tactics
,V4.With the ever-increasing number of Americans who
hg-ye had military service, a new vocabulary has come into.
being.. Words that formerly had been as remote as a
foreign Ihguage, have how become part of our every day
speech.
For example, take these three words — Directive;
Strategy; Tactics.
The all-too-often-ridiculed military really has something in these three words. They cover everything, from
A to Z, from Alpha to Omega, from Beginning to End,
ffroiii Cause1 and Effect — with one gimmick. That gimmick
ia. full of understanding not only of the meaning of each
■vy^rdjvbut^bf the. necessity of ordered sequence, and of the
rigidity of the boundaries of authority carried by each
word.
. A Directive comes from the ultimate level of authority.
It defines the overall objective. It is the policy command.
It states what is to be accomplished.
. Strategy is the master plan to carry out a directive.
It is worked out by the experts, each within a specialized
field, and is co-ordinated by a master planner who limits
the activity of any specialist to that area for which his
knowledge qualifies him.
Tatties is the active, Qperat'onal nhase of carrving out
the Strategy which meets the requirements of the Directive
It is the. area of the specific mission, in which a given
stroordi&ate forte is ordered to carry out a portion of the
maSt£r plan, using a prescribed amount of material and
manpower, to be completed at a specified time, in clearly
defined locations.
if each Tactical unit fulfills its mission, on time, in
tile area assigned to it, using the allocated manpower and
rhaterial without requiring reinforcement from higher authority, .the Strategy is successful. K the Strategy-is successful, the Directive is carried out. Tactical failure can
enda^gerr Strategy and Strategy failure nullifies the
Directive.
In noh-mllitary life the same sequences apply. A gigantic Construction program may be envisioned. A Directive
defines the proper objective in words.
The experts — engineers, architects, raw material
source men, the fabricators of the needed finished materials,
the leaders of the manpower required, the transporters of
the ¥aw material to the fabricators, and from them to the
construction site — evolve the strategic plan.
The doers — the manpower on the job, each with his
labor and effort as a tiny fraction of the whole, put the
strategic plan into effect.
Together, as „ a team, . they make possible the vast
accomplishments that make these United States of ours the
greatest, most po\verful, glorious and efficiently successful
nation in the history of the world.
There is really quite a thought for all of us in the
essential, but clearly defined limits of activity involved in
the three words — Directive, Strategy, Tactics.
The Stalin System
We have been enabled to know enough about Khrushchev to recognize that, unlike Stalin;, the newly rising leader
of the, Russian bureauracy is not a paranoiac. Khrushchev
himself, in his famous secret speech on the "cult of personality" delivered before the 20th Congress of the Russian
(jdmmUnist Party, lias made it more than evident that Stalin
Was, a madman. A purge with Khrushchev as the director
might not £0 to the extreirie of excess that characterized
the Stalin purges.
Khrushchev might not attempt to kill all of his successors. Khrushchev is likely to purge on two grounds —
political, and in order to intimidate and to terrorize. Stalin
went much further.
However, the "system of purging, of jailing or executing
opponents, the secret trial, the use of an amalgam in framing opponents, all of this is the Stalin system. And it is
the Stalin system which continues to prevail. Even without
the excesses caused by a madman who controls the system,
it remains horrible and reprehensible.
If Khrushchev, then, happens to spare one of his best
friends in the purge, let us not hail him. Khrushchev is
rising as the leader of a system which is obnoxious, and
w^&h "Ifecks ev^n elementary fair play. It mangles all that
is 'best in htimahi nature.
The new North Canton Post Office building which will be
dedicated Sunday afternoon, August 11, is located at 205 North
Main street.
The brick and masonry structure was built by Harley
Myers at a cost of $32,000 and is being leased to the government at $4,850.
Rep. Bow, who was influential in getting a new Post Office
for this town, will be the dedication speaker.
Airlines Violating
Liquor Code
Senator Strom Thurmond
of South Carolina again has
asked the Senate Subcommittee on Aviation to hold hearings on his bill to ban liquor
service aboard commercial
planes.
Last year the House overwhelmingly passed a similar bill
after testomony by pilots and
stewardesses that drinking aloft
causes serious safety hazards.
But the measure bogged down
in the Senate Commerce Committee and died with the close
of the Congressional session. The
Civil Aeronautics Board has refused to take action on the issue.
Just after the House action Air
Transport Association officials
announced that a standard of
practice agreement had been
signed by six major airlines
Which provide liquor service,
American, Eastern, National,
Northwest, TWA and United.
But the code has been virtually
ignored in recent months. Example: one of the agreements
was that no carrier wo. Id promote the availability of liquor
service. Perhaps the largest offender has been Northwest Airlines whose July timetable cover
land newspaper advertisements
Exploring the Skies from North Canton
Indoor Skies for Study North Canton Planetarium Provides
Hosts Akron^Oanton Satlelite Tracking Group
Man-made Universe
Waste By The Ton
America, one of the few islands of plenty in the sea
of human want, has the reputation of being notoriously
wasteful. Unfortunately, the reputation is well deserved.
This hfis Com?, about largely because, being richly gifted
with Natural ¥#purces and ihaving developed a remarkably
,pfodircWe^yste^,'weii^veiiever had to worry much about
.conservation.
The time is coming when Americans will have to change
their attitudes. Our population is increasing at an extraordinary rate. We should begin thinking more seriously about
conserving our resources, about making better use of what
we produce. k . .
Garbage is tnrganic matter, useful in the production of
fertilizer and Tien -gpil. The tinie will come, and probably
hot 'TRany Ttec.ad.e5 hence, when, failure to make goda OSe of
this Valuable ftfganic matter iviVt be regarded as unforgive-
.able waste. It is by no means too soon for communities "to
b&gih thffiKirig: of now to divert this vast tonnage of organic
material to -useful purposes^ i
North Canton became nationally and internationally famous in the annals of
astronomy recently when the local Satellite Tracking group was the first to simulate
the motion of the proposed satellite among the stars.
If it had not been for the efforts of Mr. Richard H. Emmons in establishing
the North Canton Planetarium, the local Satellite Tracking group probably would not
have been organized.
Last December this group became one of the nation's first official stations of
"Operation Moonwatch" under the sponsorship of the Smithsonian Astrophysical o
servatory in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The local group is one ui mree in umo working
with the Observatory.
Ti-aining sessions for the organization are held in the North Canton Planetarium
in the rear of 313 Donner road, in what appears to be a garage.
However, it is one of the fanciest garages most of us will ever see.
Inside its walls a night sky
dotted with stars comes "to life"
and stories are related concerning the stars and. legends surrounding their origin and placement in the sky.
This planetarium, which has
a capacity of 38, almost half
that serving the Cleveland Metropolitan area has a 14-foot
diameter dome upon which a
home-made star projector
"paints" its night Sky scenes.
The planetarium and its equipment were designed and built
by Mr. Emmons in his spare
time, and at a personal investment of several h.ndred rather
that the thousands usually required. He is a senior flight test
engineer at the Goodyear Aircraft corporation.
The stars were plotted and
drilled onto a globe and diurnal
motion is achieved through a
motor drive. Manual adjustments permit showing the effect
of changes in latitude and precession.
Another globe aids Mr. Emmons in outlining the star constellations and auxiliary projectors portray the sun, planets
and moon in proper phase, and
eclipses. Photographic slide projections enrich the program.
In addition, observers may see
the Southern Cross and Magellanic Clouds over Australia in
10,000 A. D., Midnight sun from
the North Pole; and the triple
conjunction of Jupiter, and Saturn in Pisces in 7 B. C.
Many thousands have -come
from an approximate radius of
25 miles to see one or all of the
4 programs offered each year.
These include the Autumn Stars,
the Christmas Star, The Winter
Stars and the Spring Stars.
Ih response to the January
1957 Scouting theme, "Eyes on
The SkieS" -approximately -2,000
regular and cub Boy Scouts attended special sessions at the
planetarium.
^Continued on Page Three}
............
the Methodist Board of Temperance.
Senator Thurmond said he has
received "numerous reports the
program is not working out" in
other ways as well.
The code calls for a limit of
two drinks per customer. But
Roland K. Quinn, Jr., president
of the Airline Stewards and
Stewardessess Ass'n, has reported: "The airlines seem to have
a tacit agreement to ignore the
code and we have many reports
of stewardesses being disciplined
for failure to serve enough liquoi
to meet airline quotas."
In addition to the many serious hazardS"" "pointed "but repeatedly by pilots and stewardesses over a two year period,
there are incidental reports
which point up the issue. Recently an American Airlines passenger choked on the toothpick
in his martini olive, forcing the
pilot to dump $400 worth of gas,
make an emergency landing in
Omaha, Nebraska, and arrange
for hospital treatment.
Mr. R. H. Emmons, originator of the North Canton "
Planetarium, is shown with the machine which makes his
showings of star-studded skies possible.
The two globes seen toward the top of the device make .
the projections on a rounded dome, giving the appearance..
: of the night skjr out-of-doors^ ,
Park Theater
To Reopen
North Canton's Park Theater
will again open Its door this fall
after being closed for more than
a year.
Representative of the heirs of
the M. M. Mohler estate, Lester
Mohler, said a five-year lease
has been completed with Lorns
seller, owner of Canton's Towne
Theater.
Extensive remodeling plans for
the 18-year-old theater are being
considered.
Mr. Heller purchased the Old
Valentine Theater in January
after it had been closed almost
five years. He reopened it as the
Towne.
The Park Theater will become
the third second-run theater in
the Canton area.
Negotiations for the lease were
handled by the T. K. Harris
Agency Co.
Rev. Kendig New Pastor at
Uniontown Methodist Church
New pastor of the Uniontown
Methodist church is the Rev.
Charles Kindig.
a gxauucue i>f Kent State University and the Boston School of
Theology, ReV. Mr. Kindig
comes to Uniontown after-serving as pastor of the McGuffey
Memorial Methodist Chuich ox
Youngstown.
Rev. Mr. Kindig and his wife,
Ardith Joan, have three children;
Ardith Joan, Debbie Elaine and
Donald Marllh.
Libr&y Extends
Reading Program
The Library has announced that its summer
reading program, which
was to end this Wednesday, has been extended
through Saturday.
This me'ahs that boys
and girls have ' until Saturday to turn in their
final reports on the books
they have read.
Rep. Frank Bow To Speak,
Special Guests Invited
The new North Canton Post Office will be dedicated
to the people of North Canton, Sunday, August 11, at 2
p.m.
Dedication services will be held to the rear of the
building wicn the loacung piatlorm serving as a stage for
the speakers.
Delivering the dedication address will be Rep. .Frank
T. Bow from the 16th Congressional District.
Special guests who have been invited include Assistant
Postmaster General Ormonde Kieb, and postmasters and
supervisors of area offices, in addition to two former local
superintendents, Mr U. H. Zengler and Mr. Clark Wehl.
The tentative program lists
music by the North Canton
Band. Mr. William Morris, city
solicitor, will serve as the toast.
master.
The invocation will be given
by Rev. Reed of the Community
Cnristian Church and the bene-
diction by Rev. Fr. R. Steigei*
of St. Paul's Catholic Church.
The Pledge of Allegiance will
be given by members of the
local Boy Scouts and American
lAgion will present the colore,
followed by greetings and wel-
come by William E. Dornan,
Canton postmaster.
Mr. C. C. Brooks, district
director from Cleveland, and
Mr. Rumble, regional director
from Cincinnati, will then deliver a few remarks and the program will be turned over to Mr.
John W. Meinhart, regional real
estate manager, who will present the keys of the building to
Mayor R. B. Evans.
The Mayor, after acepting the
building for the community, will
turn it over to the Branch Supervisor Al Davis, who will accept
the Post Office in the name of
its patrons.
Open house will be held inside immediately following the
ceremony.
Local Rotarians Hear
Rev. Brinsr Speak
On His World Trip
Guest speaker at this Thursday evening meeting of the North
Caaton KOuary cluj will be Rav.
Orville Briner of Canton.
Rev. Briner and his wife have
just returned from a cruise a-
round the world and he will have
color pictures to illustrate his
talk.
Formerly very active in YMCA
work, the Reverend is now on
leave of absence from the First
Presbyterian church in Canton,
where he had served as associate
minister.
Program chairman for the
month of August is Mr. Roy
Smith.
Knights tf Cokimbus
Install New Officers
District Deputy Paul R. Sullivan of Canton will supervise
and conduct the Installation of
Officers of Bishop McFadden
Council No. 3777 Knights of Columbus in the Council Chambers
on Wednesday August 7 at 8:30
p.m. Mr. Sullivan, who is. Past
Grand Knight and Trustee elect
of the Council will be assisted
by Mr. Lea Harrison, his personal Warden.
The General Program Chairman's monthly meeting will be
held the same evening in the
Council Chambers at 7:30.
4-H Clothing Club Meets
The Plain Township 4-H Cloth-
ing club met at the home of
Mrs. R.-. W. Hinton, July 24, at
1:30.
Barb James gave a demonstration on finishing seams and Bet-
ty Jane Gill demonstrated the
slip-stitch.
Another metting was held '■ at
Mrs. Hinton's home on Wednesday, J.ly 31. .:'
Sandra Wins Trip to California
An aptitude for coloring has won a trip to Hollywood,
California, for Miss Sandra Skinner of North Canton.
Just as soon as her father, James R. Skinner of 2436 Far-
view, can take time from his job at the E. W. Bliss Co., he
and his 11-year-old daughter will fly out to "The Home of the
Stars" for a five-day sight-seeing trip.
Disneyland is first on Sandra's list of places to visit.
The happy word came to the Skinner household last Saturday, telling them that Sandra has won first place ih the
state Superior Frankie coloring contest.
Last year Sandra won a bicycle in the same contest. She
had previously won prizes in the Repository's Christmas coloring contest and the Annie Oakley contest.
Sandra, who will be in her first year at the new Junior
High school this year, composed a 3-D of the picture of a
baseball game. She cut out each figure in the picture anfl put
them on a baseball glove which she devised. The glove was
covered with simulated leather and stitched. It was this original
and novel treatment of the subject which won for Sandra the
top award.
The trip comes as somewhat of a birthday present for
Sandra who will be 12 on August 14.
While she and her father are out west, Sahara's nrtther
and younger sister, Sally, 6, will wait at home for th«ta to
bring back still fend motion pictures of their trip. Mr. Slflhner
is &h amfcteur photographer, so there will probably be ample
of these.
The Skinners, whb have lived in North Canton three years,
&re formerly -from Reedurban.